Geo-Spatial Analysis in Hydrology
Material type:![Article](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/AR.png)
- books978-3-03936-981-2
- 9783039369805
- 9783039369812
- Research & information: general
- Geography
- Canadian Hydrographic Service
- Satellite-Derived Bathymetry
- empirical
- classification
- photogrammetry
- level of confidence
- spatio-temporal GIS
- hydrodynamic model
- spatio-temporal computation framework
- flood risk
- 3D simulation
- watershed division
- Sentinel-2A
- Google Earth Engine (GEE)
- Taihu Basin
- hydrology
- plains area
- RapidEye
- water quality
- red edge
- remote sensing
- flash flood
- PCSWMM
- curve number
- rainfall-runoff model
- HEC-RAS
- Pakistan
- crop water requirement
- reflectance-based crop coefficients
- normalized difference vegetation index
- evapotranspiration
- geo-spatial analysis
- scaling issue
- basin characteristic extraction
- hydrological modelling
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books Open Access | Available |
Open Access star Unrestricted online access
Geo-spatial analysis has become an essential component of hydrological studies to process and examine geo-spatial data such as hydrological variables (e.g., precipitation and discharge) and basin characteristics (e.g., DEM and land use land cover). The advancement of the data acquisition technique helps accumulate geo-spatial data with more extensive spatial coverage than traditional in-situ observations. The development of geo-spatial analytic methods is beneficial for the processing and analysis of multi-source data in a more efficient and reliable way for a variety of research and practical issues in hydrology. This book is a collection of the articles of a published Special Issue Geo-Spatial Analysis in Hydrology in the journal ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. The topics of the articles range from the improvement of geo-spatial analytic methods to the applications of geo-spatial analysis in emerging hydrological issues. The results of these articles show that traditional hydrological/hydraulic models coupled with geo-spatial techniques are a way to make streamflow simulations more efficient and reliable for flood-related decision making. Geo-spatial analysis based on more advanced methods and data is a reliable resolution to obtain high-resolution information for hydrological studies at fine spatial scale.
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English
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